Week 10- China
(Beijing, Trans Siberian Railway)
29th
of September to 8th of October
Monday morning
arrived, us packed and ready to negotiate the underground in Xi’an before
breakfast. Aim: reaching the main train station with A LOT of time to spare!!
Thanks to the lovely girlies in the Han Tang Youth Hostel, we were booked onto
the 10:02am bullet train to Beijing.
After our first McD’s breakfast on this RTW trip, the kids were playing
with their mini-bullet trains and collecting some fans and friends!!
We played a game of animal snap too and a little Chinese boy (about 1 year old) joined in the action. I still find it a bit funny to see these small babies with out any nappies!! Their clothing is designed in such a fashion that there is a big opening between the legs, and I think they just “go” where ever and whenever. But what I’ve heard is, that these babies an also be potty trained before they are one year old. Different culture, different ways…
We played a game of animal snap too and a little Chinese boy (about 1 year old) joined in the action. I still find it a bit funny to see these small babies with out any nappies!! Their clothing is designed in such a fashion that there is a big opening between the legs, and I think they just “go” where ever and whenever. But what I’ve heard is, that these babies an also be potty trained before they are one year old. Different culture, different ways…
After our
previous travel fiasco in SuZhou, we were so relieved to be seated on that
train without any stress in the running up to it!! The bullet train between
Xi’an and Beijing travelled at top speed of 303km/h. We covered a distance of
1200km in just under 5 hours. To put this into perspective, if there was a bullet
train between Glasgow and London, it will take you just over 2 hours to travel
there!! Again, this culture of extremes, displaying itself!!
Hole-in-the-ground-toilets to bullet trains. It makes me smile!!
We are getting
very good and confident on these Chinese underground trains. With our big back
packs and 4 children we can push a lot of people out of the way in the process
of getting onto a train. Not even rush hour scare us!!!(I’ve seen a fantastic
you-tube clip, about how people get squashed onto a rush hour train. Will try
and find it for you!! Luckily our expeditions so far has not gone to that level
yet…)
Squashed onto a subway.... |
I’ve booked us
into an apartment hotel, west of the city center, near Embassy-of-the-World
quarters. After our first week in China, we just used this time to catch up on
admin, picking up our Trans-Siberian train tickets from the local agency I’ve
used and to relax. We went in search of Ritan (Temple of the Sun) Park. A few
bus journeys later and some help from locals with their goolge street map app,
we enjoyed the lovely open space. Praise God, on our walk to the park, we also
managed to find new walking shoes for the little girls…Merrells (at 150Yuan=£15
per pair…we were smiling!!) The previous two pairs of Carrimore children’s
walking shoes needs mentioning. We bought them 6 years ago. They’ve served us
as a family so well…Thomas had the ‘noses’ scuffed to the fabric, practicing
his scooter skills down the hill in Kilmarnock, Arno has mended it a few times
with STRONG glue…Philippa and then Nina has worn them over the years until they
could not be mended anymore. We had so say good bye to them here in Beijing!!
Hopefully their replacements will still be in good shape to be pass down to
cousins over the next few years!!!
Besides Chinese
New Year, we have (unbeknown to us) decided to travel on the buzziest day of
the year… 1st of October(Wednesday) was the fist day of the Chinese Moon Festival, with the day also declared as
the ‘National Day” in China. It was holiday for the whole country for the next
7 days. Luckily, after negotiate the Subway system again, we were leaving China
on the 11:22am train across Siberia.
Our ticket was taking us as far as
Ulaanbaatar (Ulan Bator) in Mongolia. We were all very excited, because this
would have been our first overnighter on a train. The time of arrival in UB
was, Thursday afternoon at 14:20. For financial reasons…we were booked into
Second Class, hard sleeper. The locals and many tourists travel in this class.
The soft sleepers just have 2 beds(berths) in each compartment, vs second class
with 4 bunks. Nina did not pay and the other 3 were charged half price because
they were under 140cm in height (hee hee…yes, that’s how they do it here in
China!!) So there we were getting settled in our compartment on the 5th
carriage from the front, trying to find places for all our luggage. Arno’s bunk
was in the next compartment and Nina and Philippa had to share a bed. We spend
the rest of the day watching the Chinese country side go by, play Uno (even
inviting a Chinese traveler-who shared the compartment with Arno, to join in…he
brought the chocolates!!).
By dinner time we made our way down the train to the dining cart. A bit of confusion led to the discovery that we were issues with free lunch (obviously missed that!!) and dinner tickets at the time our carriage attendant handed the linen out. Luckily I had the tickets still in my pocket and we were loving the chicken and rice dish. (Arno and I were a bit desperate at this stage, because we found it very difficult to motivate the children and particularly Thomas, to eat anything Chinese!!!!) (And NO, China does not do Sweet-and-sour Chicken or fried rice…can you believe that??!!)
Boarding our sleeper to Mongolia |
By dinner time we made our way down the train to the dining cart. A bit of confusion led to the discovery that we were issues with free lunch (obviously missed that!!) and dinner tickets at the time our carriage attendant handed the linen out. Luckily I had the tickets still in my pocket and we were loving the chicken and rice dish. (Arno and I were a bit desperate at this stage, because we found it very difficult to motivate the children and particularly Thomas, to eat anything Chinese!!!!) (And NO, China does not do Sweet-and-sour Chicken or fried rice…can you believe that??!!)
It was a bit of a
palava settling everybody down for the night (the toilets were getting a bit
smelly too…I was feeling for the people who were planning to be on the train
for the full 6-day journey..) We arrived at the Chinese boarder round 10pm,
where a peloton of soldiers guarded the carriages, while the passport officer
got onto the train and collected our leaving cards and passports. While we were
waiting for the admin to be done, our train was puffed (yes diesel engines)
into the mechanic yard. At this stage all the carriages were separated and
pushed into an individual dock (and yes, we were still inside the train!!). Now
the mechanics set to work: we were manually pushed into the specific place,
carriage-lift placed into position and then we were hoisted into the air. Yes,
I kid not, the whole carriage with everybody inside was airborne!!
The reason for this is the following: the width of the train tracks between China and Mongolia is different. At this stage I had enough and it was after midnight, so I decided to go for a nap. Arno thought he is not gona bother, because the officials still had to return our passports on the China side, then we had to puff-puff over to Mongolia and go thought the whole process there again (minus the engineering…) Although I had to be woken up at the Mongolian side ( to present my sleep face to the boarder patrol officer) my decisions to take forty winks paid off…it was after 3am before we were finally on our way again! Poor Arno was a bit tired the following day!
The reason for this is the following: the width of the train tracks between China and Mongolia is different. At this stage I had enough and it was after midnight, so I decided to go for a nap. Arno thought he is not gona bother, because the officials still had to return our passports on the China side, then we had to puff-puff over to Mongolia and go thought the whole process there again (minus the engineering…) Although I had to be woken up at the Mongolian side ( to present my sleep face to the boarder patrol officer) my decisions to take forty winks paid off…it was after 3am before we were finally on our way again! Poor Arno was a bit tired the following day!
We were welcomed
by the Mongolian sun. After the polluted cloudiness we’ve experienced in China
up to this stage, we were rejoicing! The rest of the morning was spend reading,
while the kids were playing games with the compartment filled with Chinese
girls. These children are people magnets wherever they go!!!
At lunch time we
were heading towards the dining cart again…just this time, the Chinese one was
left behind at the boarder and replaced with a beautifully decorated Mongolian
‘restaurant’. The Chinese girls warned us about the food, so we were pleasantly
surprised to order from an English menu and find tasty-tasty food!!! Excitement
was growing. Our introduction to the Mongolian culture was a very nice
surprise. Even the waitress greeted us with: “Welcome to Mongolia!” when she
found out that our final stop will be Ulaanbaatar.(‘Ulan Bator’ is the Russian
spelling, and not too pleasantly received by the Mongols. More about that
history in my next blog.)
As we approached
UB form the east , the vast see-untill-your-eyes-can-not-see-any-further
landscape changed into undulating tree-clad hills. Fall seemed to have taken
over from the green summer lushness – warm shades of brown, light green and
yellows were the tell tale. We were hanging out of the carriage windows
drinking it all in.
WE WERE IN MONGOLIA!!!!!!! The final stretch into UB city centera surprised me with the colorful array of buildings, mix-match of houses, ger’s (that’s a traditional nomadic round tent – and do not forget the brand new Land Cruiser parked beside it) tall sky-scrapers, building work EVERYWHERE and loadsa junk clogging up open spaces. A feast for the eye. So much to see, so much to take in…
WE WERE IN MONGOLIA!!!!!!! The final stretch into UB city centera surprised me with the colorful array of buildings, mix-match of houses, ger’s (that’s a traditional nomadic round tent – and do not forget the brand new Land Cruiser parked beside it) tall sky-scrapers, building work EVERYWHERE and loadsa junk clogging up open spaces. A feast for the eye. So much to see, so much to take in…
We arrived on
schedule 2:20pm at the station and was welcomed at the door of our carriage no
5 by our driver, sent by the Golden Gobi Hostel. Now that’s giving hospitality
a new meaning in my books!!! And so it continued…
Post script:
Nina’s special word: ‘Youth Hospital’
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